New European Immigrants: Some Notes
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I. Who are the New European Immigrants?
A. Generally speaking, they are
the nearly 40 million immigrants who came to the
Asian.
1. Most consisted of people
from Southern, Central and
2. Approximately 1 million (951,802) of these
immigrants were from
3. Official records also
reveal that 883,706 immigrants moved to this country from Mexico, Central, and
B. Specifically, the list
includes Armenians, Bohemians, Moravians, Bulgarians, Serbians, Montegrins, Croatians, Slovenians, Dalmatians, Bosnians, Herzegovinians, Finns, Greeks, Jews, Italians, Lithuanians,
Magyhars, Poles, Portuguese, Rumanians, Russians, Ruthenians, Slovaks, Spaniards, Turks. (See
Parrillo).
C. These 39+ million immigrants significantly
affected
II. Some consequences of this large
tide of eastern and southern European immigrants:
A. "To ethnocentric WASPs,
the new immigrants were alien races about to overwhelm American institutions
and cities...
1. ...they were coming from what
were considered the most backward areas of
2. ...their customs and even food habits
differed greatly from the Anglo-Saxon-Teutonic norm of earlier settlers.
3. ...their religion was different. They were
more likely to be Catholic or Muslim than Protestant.
4. ...they were concentrated in the cities and
thus were highly visible (Palen, 1987, p. 210).
B. In
1900, only 51 percent of the U. S. population was native white and of native
parentage (Palen, 1987, p. 210).
1. In
eastern seaboard cities such as
2. "By 1890 New York had half as many
Italians as Naples, as many Germans as Hamburg, twice as many Irish as Dublin,
and two-and-a-half times the number of Jews in Warsaw (Palen,
p. 78)."
3. Josiah Strong (Our Country, 1891)
observed that 62 percent of
4.
III. Immigration restrictions:
A. Background: The Dillingham
Commission:
1. Public pressure
on Congress lead to the establishment of the United States Immigration
Commission, (referred to as the "Dillingham Commission") in 1907--
named because of its chair, Senator William P. Dillingham of
a. The commission presented its 41 volume
report in 1911 with its conclusions about the effects of immigration. Basic
conclusion:
(1) There were two types of immigrants:
(1.) old immigrants (Anglo-Saxons) who were hard-working pioneers.
(2.) The new immigrants from southern and eastern
(2) The "Old" immigrants tended to
assimilate relatively soon. New immigrants "congregated" which
slowed down the assimilation process. They were also less skilled, less educated, possessed greater "criminal
tendencies" and were more willing to experience a lower standard of living
(Parillo, p. 173)
(a) Parrillo
describes the basic flaws of this study:
(1.) It lumped too many groups of immigrants together by choosing
only two categories.
(2.) It failed to acknowledge that
western and northern Europeans had longer to assimilate.
(b) Also, the study was
influenced by preexisting racial and ethnic biases against the new immigrants—
(3) The Commission suggested
two measures to solve the problem:
a) a
literacy test
b) immigration
quotas
B. Immigration Legislation
(Restrictions):
1. The Literacy Bill of 1917:
a. This was the first literacy
bill to pass-- Two earlier versions were vetoed by Presidents Cleveland and
Taft. Congress passed the 1917 bill over President Wilson's veto.
This was not the first attempt to restrict immigration from places other than western Europe.
Why does Congress favor immigration restrictions while
the President tends to oppose them? |
(1) (The Chinese Exclusion Act
was passed in 1882 which outlawed Chinese immigration for ten years (Schaefer,
1990, p. 118).
b. Immigrants had to read
thirty words in any language.
c. It didn't work as intended because the general
levels of literacy in
(1) Schaefer (1990, p. 120)
states that another exception to the literacy test was made if non-Anglo-Saxon
immigrants were fleeing racial discrimination.
2. The National Origins Quota
Act of 1921
a. This reduced the number of
southern and eastern Europeans to 20 percent of those coming over before the act
was passed. Basically, for a period of 3 years, it limited the number of
immigrants to three percent of a given nationality residing in the country in
1910.
3. The Johnson-Reed Act of 1924
a. This was even tougher-- it restricted immigration to 2 percent of the number of people of a given nationality in the country in 1890.
b. In 1929 new legislation made the quota system
permanent and restricted immigration to 3 percent of the number of of people of a given nationality in the country in 1920.
(1) This favored northern and
western Europeans. For example,
(2) Farley (1988, p. 344) reports that under
the quota system, approximately 84 percent of the quotas went to northern and
western
4. The McCarran-Walter Act of
1952
a. Passed over Truman's Veto,
this act simplified the quota system. It kept the 1920 census as a basis,
but dropped all quotas to 1/6 of one percent.
(1) Japanese immigrants were
allowed to become citizens for the first time.
(2) This act had provisions to bar entry to
communists and subversives, including anyone who found to have advocated
communist ideals (Schaefer, 1990, p. 120).
5. The Immigration and
Nationality (Naturalization) Act of 1965
a. The first act to end the
quota system.
(1) Set numerical limits--
120,000 from the
(2) Priorities were given to people with job
skills and kin in the U. S.
(3) Immediate relatives were admitted above
periodically set limits. For example, in 1987 the limit was 270,000
but there were actually 601,516 immigrants that year.
IV. An example of a persistent
ethnic subculture-- The Gypsies (Parrillo):
A. They are elusive-- difficult
to study even though they number approximately 500,000. Why?
1. The
2. They are migratory-- constantly moving
about.
3. They do not want to provide outsiders with information
about themselves.
B. Believed to have originated
in Northern India over a millennium ago (through tracing their language, Romany
to Sanskrit)-- first arrived in America in the latter 1600's coming over from
Scotland to work on Virginia Plantations-- also settled in New Amsterdam.
1. Migrated to the
2. After WWII (when as many as 500,000 may were
killed by the Nazi's) they again migrated to the
a. No hard data on immigration
for Gypsies.
3. They live mostly in cities--
10,000 in
a. Significant numbers are
found in
C. Gypsy (Rom) culture:
1. Familia
a. A gypsy turns to the familia for all kinds of support--
b. Strongly patriarchal with males in charge.
2. Vitsi
a. This is a kinship group and
serves as a means by which Gypsies classify each other. Similar
to the concept of "tribe".
3. Gypsy economy:
a. Most Gypsies avoid the
American educatonal system and the majority cannot
read nor write.
(1) They also do not like
formal records kept on them—
(i.) Parrillo states that they can use the system quite
effectively, meaning that they obtain what they need from the "larger
American society"
b. There is a visible division
of labor. Men usually perform seasonal work that incorporates the kinds of
skills that are "mobile" in nature;
c. Women contribute
substantially to family income mainly through fortune telling.
4. Courtship and Marriage:
a. Sexual mores are considered
quite strict-- pre-marital chastity is emphasized (but they marry early) and
prostitution is rare.
b. Couples marry early (12-16
years) and fertility is high.
c. Great effort is taken to
ensure endogamy--
d. Traditionally, the wife
moves in with the husband's family.
e. Divorce rates are high.
5. Social control:
a. The KRIS or
(1) The chief sanction (and the
most effective) is shunning. (Note that this is a common element among
many close-knit subcultures-- The Amish provide another example where shunning
is used as a mechanism of social control).
6. Customs:
a. Marime
(pollution): Basic ideas about cleanliness and pollution--
applies to all walks of life.
(1) The upper body is clean--
the lower body is unclean. The latter is not to be allowed to come into contact
with the upper portion in any way. (See Parrillo).